
Courtesy, The Lilly Library, Indiana
University Bloomington, Indiana.
Brown County
Drug Stores
by Tony Coppi
The first drug store in Brown County started in 1919 when
Charles Genolin, a pharmacist from Indianapolis, rented a room
in the Franklin P. Taggart two-story building at the corner of
Van Buren and Main streets which is now the Hob Nob Corner Restaurant.
He operated the store for only two years, passing away in
1921. His widow obtained a pharmacist license after passing state
examinations and continued to operate the store until 1925.
On that year Herbert J. Miller, a drug store owner in Cross
Plains, Indiana stopped in for a five-cent coke and a visit.
He learned that the store was for sale and after a brief discussion
he became the new owner.
The Miller family ran the business in the oldest commercial
building in Nashville for 47 years. Mr.Miller was killed in an
automobile accident in 1947. His son, Maurice `Pods' Miller,
inherited ownership of the store. He was a graduate of the Purdue
College of Pharmacy.
"When we first came here in 1925 there was only one shop,
a post office, a bank, a barber shop, two grocery stores, a dry
goods store, and two livery stables," Pods recalled.
Hook's Drugs, the pioneer chain of drug stores in Indiana,
began operation in Indianapolis in 1900. From then on the privately-held
company grew and had over 330 drug stores in Indiana, Ohio, Michigan,
Illinois, and Kentucky.
In 1972 they purchased the Miller store and moved it into
Salt Creek Park.
During the years of operation they preserved furnishings,
artifacts and memorabilia of the many stores such as the original
soda fountain in the first store, oak top soda tables, porcelain
drug jars, an antique prescription counter, and show globes,
the symbol of pharmacy.
The collection of antique pharmacy items and relics led to
the formation of the first museum in the United States to document
and interpret the history of community pharmacies in America.
In 1975 Hook's commemorated its 75th anniversary by re-assembling
the original furnishings of the first drug store into a room
at the Nashville location. Kay Hedrick and Mary Doris Bay, dressed
in period costumes and worked in the museum store. In 1992 Hook's
closed the museum in Nashville. The fixtures, contents, antiques,
replicas, and old time remedies were moved to the museum at the
Indiana State Fairgrounds.
Before Hook's established a store in Nashville Floyd Cox,
owner of three drug stores in Indianapolis, opened Cox's Rexall
Drugs at the corner of Van Buren and Molly Lane. He and his wife,
Gladys, lived in an apartment above the store for two years.
Cox was a past president of the Indianapolis Association of
Retail Druggists. He was helped organize the Chamber of Commerce
and Lions Club in Brown County. He promoted the idea of having
a golf course in Nashville and was a charter member and board
of the Golf Club of Brown County.
Cox passed away in 1962. His wife, also a pharmacist, took
over the store. She moved the business to a building on South
Van Buren and Washington Streets behind the Big Foot store. Looking
toward retirement from her profession, she sold the store to
Jim Mosier, who changed the name to The Village Pharmacy.
Another change in ownership was made when Pat Cashen bought
the store in 1980. After eight years he sold out in order to
spend more time in his other store in Columbus, Indiana, Doctor's
Park Pharmacy.
David Brierly, from Shelbyville, was the last owner of the
Village Pharmacy. In 1997 he sold the inventory to Hook's and
joined their staff of pharmacists. He is now working in a CVS
store in Columbus.
The only remaining drug store in Nashville is the CVS Pharmacy
in Salt Creek Park. Jeff Boley and Morris `Mo' Skirvin are pharmacists
with the chain. They are both graduates of the Butler University
College of Pharmacy. Mr. Boley, originally from St. Mary, Ohio,
had owned a drug store in Albany, Indiana for 15 years. Mr. Skirvin
was born and raised in Brown County. On graduating from Butler
University he worked eight years for Pat Cashen before joining
the Hook chain.
Some nostalgic traces of the old Brown County drug stores
are still around. The original oak fixture and apothecary itemssome
dated around 1900along with medical and surgical instruments
of a country doctor, Ruben J. Miller, grandfather of `Pods' Millers,
remain in the Hob Nob restaurant.
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